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Granma Province - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Granma Province

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Granma Province
Location of Granma Province in Cuba
Location of Granma Province in Cuba
Country Flag of Cuba Cuba
Capital Bayamo
Area 8,375.49 km² (3,234 sq mi)
Population 829,333 (2004[1])
Density 99 /km² (256 /sq mi)
Time zone EST (UTC-5)
Area code +53-023
Website : Granma Portal (Spanish)

Granma is one of the provinces of Cuba. Its capital is Bayamo. Other towns include Manzanillo (a port on the Gulf of Guacanayabo) and Pilón.

Contents

[edit] History

The province was named after the yacht Granma, used by Che Guevara and Fidel Castro to land in Cuba with 82 guerrillas in 1956. The American who sold them the secondhand yacht in Mexico apparently had named it after his grandmother[2] and so the name of this vessel, with its non-standard spelling, became an icon for Cuban communism. Not every Cuban realizes that the name would translate as abuela, although all can name the mother ship of the revolution.

As a result, the province is full of reminders of the Cuban Revolution, and the Cuban Wars of Independence, plaques in the mountain commemorating the 1959 struggle against Fulgencio Batista. There are said to be many unmarked grave sites from the different wars.[citation needed] Also unmarked, although there are archaeological "digs", one can find the sites of the various palenques, the fortified hamlets held of escaped slaves. Recently a hurricane destroyed the site of Castro's headquarters at La Plata. There are numerous abandoned gold, silver, and manganese mine sites. This is the area where Raúl Castro holds his centre of power and it is said to be the site of secret garrisons.[citation needed]

[edit] Economy

Coffee is grown in the mountainous regions of the province, and during the coffee harvest, there may be roadblocks, where soldiers ensure that the coffee is delivered to the government and not the black market.

[edit] Municipalities

Municipality Population
(2004)
Area
(km²)
Location Remarks
Bartolomé Masó &0000000000053024.00000053,024 &0000000000000629.000000629 20°10′7″N 76°56′33″W / 20.16861, -76.9425 (Bartolomé Masó)
Bayamo &0000000000222118.000000222,118 &0000000000000918.000000918 20°22′54″N 76°38′33″W / 20.38167, -76.6425 (Bayamo) Provincial capital
Buey Arriba &0000000000031327.00000031,327 &0000000000000452.000000452 20°10′25″N 76°44′57″W / 20.17361, -76.74917 (Buey Arriba)
Campechuela &0000000000046092.00000046,092 &0000000000000577.000000577 20°14′0″N 77°16′44″W / 20.23333, -77.27889 (Campechuela)
Cauto Cristo &0000000000021159.00000021,159 &0000000000000550.000000550 20°33′44″N 76°28′10″W / 20.56222, -76.46944 (Cauto Cristo)
Guisa &0000000000050923.00000050,923 &0000000000000596.000000596 20°15′40″N 76°32′17″W / 20.26111, -76.53806 (Guisa)
Jiguaní &0000000000060320.00000060,320 &0000000000000646.000000646 20°22′24″N 76°25′20″W / 20.37333, -76.42222 (Jiguaní)
Manzanillo &0000000000130789.000000130,789 &0000000000000498.000000498 20°20′23″N 77°06′31″W / 20.33972, -77.10861 (Manzanillo)
Media Luna &0000000000035330.00000035,330 &0000000000000376.000000376 20°08′40″N 77°26′10″W / 20.14444, -77.43611 (Media Luna)
Niquero &0000000000041252.00000041,252 &0000000000000582.000000582 20°02′50″N 77°34′41″W / 20.04722, -77.57806 (Niquero)
Pilón &0000000000029751.00000029,751 &0000000000000462.000000462 19°54′20″N 77°19′15″W / 19.90556, -77.32083 (Pilón)
Río Cauto &0000000000047833.00000047,833 &0000000000001500.0000001,500 20°33′50″N 76°55′2″W / 20.56389, -76.91722 (Río Cauto)
Yara &0000000000059415.00000059,415 &0000000000000576.000000576 20°16′37″N 76°56′49″W / 20.27694, -76.94694 (Yara)

Source: Population from 2004 Census.[1] Area from 1976 municipal re-distribution.[3]

[edit] Demographics

In 2004, the province of Granma had a population of 829,333.[1] With a total area of 8,375.49 km² (3,233.8 sq mi),[4] the province had a population density of 99.0/km² (256.4/sq mi).

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Atenas.cu (2004). 2004 Population trends, by Province and Municipality. Retrieved on 2007-10-02. (Spanish)
  2. ^ The Independent. At home with Castro: Cuba's 'maximum chief'
  3. ^ Statoids (July 2003). Municipios of Cuba. Retrieved on 2007-10-06.
  4. ^ Government of Cuba (2002). Population by Province. Retrieved on 2007-10-02. (Spanish)

[edit] External links


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